Maybe it's the climate, not the same degrees of heat and baseline humidity as places not in the 50-odd degrees North latitudes, but... Extractor fans seem to do well enough over here. Either in the (normally closed) window or out from the 'inner bathroom[1] without windows' as most hotels generally have. Occasionally in homes, but none of the handful of homes I've lived in have had them. (Childhood home once had one set in the kitchen window, but wasn't reinstated in the 'new' double-glazed windows installed in the '80s.)
Of the three houses I'm currently most familiar with, the (frosted) bathroom windows of two of them are on the first floor (US: 2nd), the one with most potential overlook onto (to discern the rough image of any pink blob that might be naked in it, with halfway viable lighting conditions) has a roller-blind. All three of them have a thin 'upper' opening bit to the window that... Mostly remain closed. In hot weather, I might open one of them to encourage heat-trapped air to vent out from the whole house, but never necessary to deal with steamy showers. Maybe there's just better moisture-resistance/air-bricking, or maybe I just don't have hot enough showers/humid enough weather to make it a problem.
From Land's End (well, Mousehole) to John o'Groats (just up the hill, by the junction off the A99 towards Castle Of Mey), the various hotels/hostelsI've been in have had extractor fans, which might be a matter of commercial building-use regulations, but I could also just open the window in one (JoG, opened into an inaccessible 'gap' between the buildings that formed the whole site), to save myself the noise. With no obvious condensation build-up.
[1] The quite literal room with bath and showerhead (or at least a fully equipped shower-cubicle). As well as the loo/sink. Though individual WC-only 'cubicle' rooms tend to have lighting-linked extractor fans (just for the smells?).